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Type | Student newspaper |
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Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | The Hanover Review, Inc. |
Founder(s) | Gregory Fossedal, Gordon Haff, Ben Hart, Keeney Jones |
President | James D. Eiler |
Editor-in-chief | Zoe E. Dominguez |
Founded | 1980 |
Political alignment | Conservative |
Headquarters | Hanover, New Hampshire, U.S. |
Circulation | 14,000[1] |
Website | dartreview.com |
The Dartmouth Review is a conservative[2] newspaper at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, United States. Founded in 1980 by a number of staffers from the college's daily newspaper, The Dartmouth,[3] the paper is most famous for having spawned other politically conservative U.S. college newspapers that would come to include the Yale Free Press, Carolina Review, The Stanford Review, the Harvard Salient, The California Review, the Princeton Tory, and the Cornell Review.[3]
Past staffers have gone on to occupy positions in the Reagan, Bush, and Trump administrations, write for multiple publications, and author political books. Some of the most notable include Pulitzer Prize-winner Joseph Rago and Hugo Restall of The Wall Street Journal, James Panero of The New Criterion, author Dinesh D'Souza, talk show host Laura Ingraham, and Hoover Institution research fellow Peter Robinson.[1] Author, columnist, and former Nixon and Reagan speechwriter Jeffrey Hart was instrumental in The Review's founding and served as a long-time board member and advisor.[1] As of 2013, the paper has 10,000 off-campus subscribers, distributes a further 2,000 newspapers on campus, and claims 50,000 unique viewers per month on its website.[3]
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